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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 4, 1908)
c . THE MORXIXG OREGOyiAX, TUESDA Y. AUGUST 4t 1903. ' : OUTLAW IS SL1 IN RUNNING FIGHT Sons Give Battle When Ranch er Is Shot and Robbers Are Put to Flight. WOUNDED MAN MAY DIE Alleged Cattle Hustlers Attack Him for Filing Charges Against Them, After Escaping From Custody of Officers at Oroflno. LEWI9TON. Idaho. Aug. S. (Spe cial.) A special from Oroflno. Idaho, says: "In a runnlngr fight with four sus pected eattla thieves near this place today George Moore, one of the alleged outlaws, was killed and one of hlfl com panions wounded by the sons of Dan ' Carr. a prominent cltlien of this coun ty, who has taken an active part In aiding the authorities In putting down cattle-rustling. The battle followed an attempt on the part of the outlaws to murder Carr, who was shot down In the dooryard of his own home and seriously, if not fatally, wounded. Carr and Ills sons were expecting trouble with the gang, ' and were armed for drfenae. The young men returned the Are, shooting Moore dead, and pursued the rustlers for some distance. Sheriff Harry Lyndon has organized .. four posses and started in .pursuit of the outlaws. As the latter are well armed and desperate, it is probable that more blood will be shed before they are captured. The men for whom the poses are searching are W. T. Reid. C. A. Rice - and A. J. Sloan. Carr filed a complaint against these three men and Moore last week, charging them with cattle-stealing, and warrants were issued. Reld and Rice were arrested and brought to Oroflno for preliminary examination today, In charge of Constable Miles Cochran. After their arrival here Rcld, on some pretext. Induced Cochran to take him and Rice to the livery stable, where the horses belonging to the party were. Awaiting a favorable op portunity, Reld dashed Into the office of the stable and seizing a Winchester rifle, covered Cochran with the weapon while Rice saddled two horses. Then mounting, the outlaws rode rapidly away. In the outskirts of the town they were Joined by Sloan and Moore, and all four, armed with rifles, rode to Carr's place, where they opened fire on Carr, who was at work near the house. Carr was shot once through the body and twice through the legs. The Carr boys are certain that one of the outlaws who escaped was wounded la the fight. WILL RULE ON WATER LAWS Supreme Court Decides Haugh Case on Appeal Today. SALEM. Or., Aug. 3. (Special.) The celebrated water rights case of Haugh et al vs. Porter et al, which came to the Supreme Court from Lake County, will have Its second inning In the higher court tomorrow. The case is attracting wide attention among attorneys as the decision of the Supreme Court is expected to settle, several disputed points of pro cedure in water right cases. The case was first appealed some weeks ago from the -decision of Circuit Judge Henry L. "Benson, who ruled that alt the residents living along Silver Creek, the rights to which were in dispute, should be made defendants In the case brought by Haugh. The lower court was sustained on this point In an exhaustive opinion by Com missioner King and now several other Important issues will be argued In con nection with the same point. The decis ion to be rendered is expected to make law In this state in all similar cases. CAUGHT BY MARKED MONEY Hallway Postal Clerk Accused of Robbing Mails. WALLA WALLA. Aug. 3 I Special.) Edward H. Fain, a railway postal clerk, who had been employed on the Northern Pacific between Dayton and Pasco, was arrested this morning in Pasco by Secret Service Agents Flavin and Riches, the latter from Portland, on a charge of having committed thefts from the reg istered malls. For more than four months it had been known that thefts were being committed, but it was not until Saturday that Fain fell into the trap which had been laid for him. Two packages of marked money were sent from Dayton and two were sent from Waltsburg, consigned to Pasco. Two of the packages were steamed and opened e'n route, and when search of Faln's clothing was made the marked money was found on him. Fain is in jail In Spokane, to which city the Secret Service men will go tonight. TOWNS NEED MORE WATER Hillsboro May Lay Pipe to Moun tain Spring. 8 Miles Distant. HILLSBORO. Or.. Aug. 3. (Special.) With Hillsboro's rapid growth In popula tion the water supply Is becoming a prob lem. The city will soon find It necessary either to dig another deep well or pipe its water from the mountains, eight miles north, where there is a natural site for a reservoir and a pure supply of ' mountain water. The site in question is about bun feet higher than the town and It will be an easy matter to Install a ' gravity system. The city Is putting In steel reservoirs for Its present supply, pumped from a depth of 300 feet. It Is probable that a vote will be called upon the question of bringing in water from the mountains at the December city election. blocks of street work and also for the construction of the new concrete and steel bridge over Deer Creek in the center of the city. The Stt.OCO bonds voted at the last election will also b? offered for sale at once. The paving will be rushed as much as possible, as It is the Intention of the Council to have actual work begin before the end of the present month. It is thought that with the usual good weather in September and October, before the rainy season sets in Roseburg will have very nearly a mile of paved street. ' TWO DROWN IN COLUMBIA Seattle Young Men Lose Lives Try ing to Cross ar Irrlgon. PATERSON. Wash., Aug. 3. (Spe cial.) Ralph Bulkley. 18 years old, and Allen Phillips. 17 years old, both of Seattle, were drowned in the Columbia River here, Saturday, by the capsizing of a boat while attempting to sail to Irrlgon. six miles above Paterson. The boys drifted down the river two miles with the boat before attempting to swim to shore. A heavy current car ried them away from the shore and it was only a few minutes before they were lost from sight. Ralph Bulkley had been In Paterson OREGON'S BIGGEST CROP OF APPLES Over 1000 Cars of Shipping . Stock Will Be Produced This Year. QUALITY NEVER BETTER PRESIDENT CAMPBELL TO WED FORMER DEAN OF ISIVERSITY MEX'S DORMITORY. Will Kuh Paving Work. ROSEBURG. Or.. vAug. 3. (Special.) At its regular meeting this week the City Council will put on final passage the street paving ordinances. Bids will be Immediately advertised for doing the 18 4 - y -ft1 P. I.. Campbell, President lul verslty of Oregon. ECGENE, Or., Aug. S. (Spe cial.) P. L. Campbell, president of the University of Oregon, has gone East to secure new in structors, the limits of his Jour ney being Chicago and Indian apolis. It is known to intimates of his family that on his return Journey he will remain for a short time in Colorado, and there marry Mrs. S. C. Church. Mrs. Church, accompanied by her little son, came to Eugene a few years ago, having accepted the position of dean of the men's dormitory. The comfort of. dormitory life greatly Increased under her management, and the young men found In her a valued adviser and a devoted friend. Later, resigning the supcrin tendency of the dormitory, she assisted In the work of the uni versity library. Mrs. Church's maiden name was Campbell, and her family is re lated to that of President Camp bell. Her father was a clergy man of the Christian Church and was educated by his uncle, Alex ander Campbell, of Kentucky, founder of the Christian Church. President Campbell and his bride will return here early in September. for his health for the past two months. and Phillips, a friend of his, came here to spend his vacation with him. The river is being dragged for the bodies. SPLIT LIKELY AT WALLACE Rival Factions of Idaho Democrats Struggle for Control. SPOKANE, Aug. 8. A special to the Chronicle from Wallace. Idaho, says: Before tomorrow evening, it is believed. Wallace will have two Democratic State Conventions instead of one. W. D. Mc Farlane and his Kootenai County dele gates will lead the antl-Dubots flght and claim the votes of Nes Perce, Ada, Canyon. Elmore, Owyhee. Boise and Lin coln counties, giving them a majority of 13 for seating McFarlane. Ex-Senator Dubois and his family have arrived. Should McFarlane and others who walked out of the Twin Falls con vention be seated, it is predicted that the Dubois men wiil hold a convention of their own. EAGLES MEET IN SEATTLE National Convention Expected Leave Million Dollars Behind. to a TTTATTT.Pl Aur. 3. The special train bearing several National officers and committeemen of the Fraternal Order of rri which will convene in Seattle, August 11, arrived this morning over the Northern racinc. jraeaoquaners nave been established at the Washington Hotel Annex. At least 10.000 Eagles are ex pected to attend the session. Edward Hirsch. of Baltimore, chairman of the National pr"ess committee, was among to ay's arrivals. He declares Jl.OOO.000 will spent here by the delegates. , N d be ROBS TWO FARM HOUSES Sneak Thief Gets Silverware and Jewelry Near Hillsboro. tiTT t ccnpA nr.. Am. 3. (Special.) Sunday afternoon, while the owners of the places were absent, a sneakthief en tered the farmhouses of C. F. Barrett and TTephon Dietrich, of Greenville, 10 miles northwest of this city, stealing some silver, four gold rings and a gold watch from the Barrett home, and some valuable Jewelry from the Dietrich place. The thief Is described as about 30 years old. weight about 150 pounds and 6 feet 8 inches lit height. Rex Beach Recovers Sight. SEATTLE. Aug. S. Rex Beach, the novelist, who returned from a bear hunting trip In Alaska ten days ago with a severe attack of iritis that threatened total blindness. Is still con fined to a dark room in the hospital, but specialists In charge say the crisis has been passed. One eye is still In a serious condition, but the author may be able to travel in a week or ten days. Prices talk at Rosenthal's shoe sal. Hood River Will Have More Than Double the Yield of a Year Ago. Abundant Harvest In the Grand Ronde. Oregon will have over 1000 cars of fine apples to ship this year, as compared with about 600 cars last year. Crop prospects on the whole are favorable, though some sections of the state are doing better than others. Hood River will have its ban ner crop, though it was feared earlier In the season that some damage had been done. The shipments from Hood River Valley will be between J0 and 600 cars against 200 cars In 1907. The Grande Ronde Valley Is preparing to send out 300 cars, double the: number shipped last year, while Medford growers expect to dispatch about 200 cars, .as they did last season. In the other apple sections of the state the conditions are reported as good or a little better than they were last season, though it Is known that some varieties,' Baldwins especially, will run lighter than last year In the Willamette Valley, and it is also said the valley Newtowns and Spitzenbergs will not pro duce the crop they did a year ago. Prices that will be realized on shipping stock will be governed by conditions in the Eastern states, where the yields are re ported to be comparatively light. HOOD RIVER OUTPUT DOUBLED Apple Shipments Estimated at 4 00 to 500 Cars. HOOD RIVER, Or., Aug. 3. (Special.) Apple men who are gathering Informa tion In regard to crop conditions in ad vance of the shipping season state that late reports give evidence of high prices for fancy Western apples again this year. It is stated that so far New Tork and Missouri, which are big factors in the apple market, only show indications of an average crop, while that of Ohio, In diana and Illinois Is almost a failure. At Grand Junction, Colo., which Is one of the greatest competitors of coast box apples in the West, the falling off in Uie amount of fruit snipped this year wiil. according to a report received from John F. Moore, manager of the Fruit Growers' Association there, amount to 2000 cars. The Grand Junction district includes Fruita, Clifton, Palisades and Grand Junction. The normal shipment from there Is from 2500 to 3000 cars, but It is stated by Mr. Moore that it will be less than 500 this year. Last year S00 cars were shipped from the district. At Yakima. Wenatchee and other apple growing centers in Washington the crop Is stated to be 10 per cent heavier than that of 1907. Reports received from Ore gon indicate good crops In some sections and light ones In others. In the Eastern part of the state the recent hot weather and apple drop early in the season are reported to have done considerable dam age. News from Medford conveys the Information that apples there will be but 60 per cent of a crop. It is stated, how ever, that the fruit is of the finest quality ever known In that section. At Hood River it was feared that the hot weather would damage the crop, but so far none has been reported. The out put of fruit here this year will be double the amount of that shipped last season, owing to a full crop In old orchards and the fact that many new ones will come into bearing. The shipment is expected to be between 400 and 600 cars, as against 200 cars last year. In quality the crop is said to show indications of being ully as good as that of last year. If not bet ter. Blight is a disease that is practically unknown In the Hood River district. It Is said that August Is the hardest month on Eastern apple crops and that reports of a shortage there now Indicate that it will be still greater. It Is also stated that all apple-growing sections on the Coast will this year devote more at tention to packing and grading and that the finest shipments of apples ever sent out of the Northwest will undoubtedly be sent to Eastern markets this year.' GOOD CROP IX.UMPQUA VALLEY Fifteen Carloads of Shipping Applea Estimated by Growers. ROSEBURG, Or.. Aug. 3. (Special.) Fruitgrowers of the Umpqua Valley have good reason to be pleased with the out look for this season's crops. Although somewhat rainy during the early part of the season, all crops are now in a flour ishing condition and it Is safe to say that more money will be received by half by Douglas County fruitgrowers than was ever received for any previous crop. Owing to the faithful work of County Fruit Inspector Riddle. In causing the re moval of all old and diseased orchards throughout the county, the quality of the fruit will be far better than ever be fore; in fact it Is the boast of the fruit growers here that Douglas County fruit will compare this year in every particu lar with the celebrated Hood River fruit. Blight has not appeared in any section of the county this season. The prune crop throughout the county will be about the same as regards quan tity, but the quality will be far superior" to that of last year. of peaches there will be about three-fourths of a crop, owing to a great extent to the cold and rainy weather early In the season. Of pears, there will be a full crop. Potatoes and melons are also up to the average and there will be a full crop of both. The big crop of the season, however, will be the apples, there being a large acreage of the finest and best marketable variety that will bear this year for the first time, besides which all the. old or chards are In fine shape and will all yield heavy crops. Last season. Rose burg fruitgrowers shipped nine carloads of apples, while this year a conservative estimate places the number of carloads that will be shipped at least 16. MEDFORD SHIPMENTS AVERAGE Apple Movement Will Not Be Larger Than Last Year. MEDFORD. Or.. Aug. 3. (Special.) About 200 cars of apples were shipped from the station at Medford last year and it is not believed that the number of cars to be sent out this year will be greater, notwithstanding the fact that a large acreage has come into bearing. It will be recalled that a frost late in May damaged the orchards to some extent, so that the extra acreage will just about of'set the loss from frost. The pear crop, however, will not hold Its own In the same manner, for It Is now said the crop will not be 75 per cent of what It was last year and some even claim that it will be about 60 per cent of last year's yield. Owing to the fact that (the frost was spotted, some of the or chardists wnl have quite as good a crop as last year, while others will have few for shipment. ) Pear shipments from Medford last year I were 110 cars. The quality of apples and pears will be ! as good -this year as heretofore. Fruit Commissioner Taylor states that "blight" in orchards Is a thing of the past and there are no orchards in this valley at present showing damage from this cause. In one or two orchards east of Medford, ' blight made its appearance six weeks ago. but with modern methods of exter i mi,;An i, n.m'oii to he of short dura tion and the damage was consequently slight. MARION COUNTY'S LARGE CROP All the Leading Apple Orchards In , Promising Condition. , j SALEM. Or.. Aug. 3. (Special.) "The I only trouDie wiin me apio I the Willamette Valley is the difficulty of j marketing to advantage," said Fruit In spector E. C. Armstrong today. He con tinued: The apple Dusiness is wraiu- . thine like the cherry business. The quan- I tity grown is comparatively small, and no adequate facilities are at hand for mar keting them. In the cherry business we bto at the mercy of the local buyers for this reason, and the apple Industry may be said to be in much the same con dition. "The apple crop this year will be larger than ever before, but It is Impossible to say how many cars there will be to ship outside. Last year the crop was very light and the outside shipments amounted to comparatively nothing." Several of the large orchardists in this vicinity are looking forward to very large yields this season. Ths Wallace or chards, for example, embracing about 46 acres of apples, are especially promising. The same may be said of the Vercler and other large orchards. ir 300 CARS IN GRAND RONDE Minimum Estimate of Season's Ship ments of Apples. LA GRANDE. Or.. Aug. 3. (Special.) The most conservative and in fact the lowest estimate put on the apple crop of the Grand Ronde Valley for the coming season is 300 carloads of a fmilt that has suffered but little with blight. Early In the season growers were alarmed at fre quent but light frosts, and then again by the apparent spread of the dreaded apple disease. But through individual atten tion to the matter at the opportune mo ment, and by reason of the careful work done by Fruit Inspector C. D. Huffman, the fruit stands today as prolific and of as high a grade as has ever been pro duced here. The 300-car shipment that is expected for the coming year is about double what was produced last year, though the year before that was close to the mark set for this year. The qual ity Is expected to be on a par with other years. DALLES APPLE CROP LARGE Shipments Will Be Five Per Cent Heavier Than. Last Year. THE DALLES. Or.. Aug. . (Special.) About 25 carloads of apples were shipped from this section last season and It is anticipated that about 6 per cent more will go out the coming season. The crop Is not only heavier this year, but was never In such good condition. So far there is an absolute absence of blight, worms or pests of any kind. The leading fruitmen say that all fruit crops in this section this year are larger than ever before. LOVE SPURNED, HE SHOOTS Farmhand Makes Attempt at Suicide Near Salem. SALEM, Or., Aug. 3. Because he had failed to win the love of pretty Emma Haggerty, Otto Miller. 26 years old, la borer on the farm of Q. M. Haggerty. the girl's father, attempted to take his own life with a revplver late Sunday night. The scene of the attempted sui cide is about seven miles east of Salem, on the Silverton Road. Haggerty. and his wife had gone to church, leaving Mil ler alone with the girl, and two small children. Miller asked Miss Haggerty to accompany him to church, but this she refused to do as he had already asked her to marry him several times, and she did not desire to encourage his atten tions. Miller has no money and has been in poor health for some time, and for these reasons the girl refused to con sider his proposal. Soon after his talk with the girl Miller went upstairs to his room,, and a few minutes later Miss Haggerty heard a revolver shot. Fearing that Miller might try to take her life as well as his own, she ran out of the house and met her parents coming home' from church." Hag gerty was the first person to enter the room. Miller had fired only one shot. The bullet entered his left breast struck a rib and glanced downward and out ward, coming out of liis side about eight Inches from where It had entered. The weapon was a 38-caIlber revolver. Dr. G. V. Ellis, of Salem, was sum moned and dressed the wound, which probably will not be fatal. Haggerty was removed to the Willamette Sanlto rium In this city. If blood poisoning does not set In he has a chance to live. RETURNS, HER MIND BLANK Grants Pass Girl Wanders Day and Night In Woods. GRANTS PASS, Or.. Aug. 3.-(Special.) While searching parties were dragging the river below town expecting to find her dead body Miss Anna Hanseth. miss ing for a night and a day. returned to her room in a local hotel early this morn ing, exhausted and unable to tell the Btorv of her wanderings. . Miss Hansen had been ill and partly In the care of a nurse, and was missed from her room chortly after 2 o'clock Sunday morning. She gave evidence of having traveled a. great distance. She could give no ac count of herself save she had started home, as she did not like the way peo ple treated her here. She took no wraps, not even a hat. Searching of her room revealed a purse with 364. her hat and a ticket to Merlin. Her action Is attributed to a spell of sickness she has lately suffered. Her brother arrived from Selma today, and will accompany her to Portland. i , s REFERENDUM IS INVALID Seattle Judge Gives Solar Plexns to Charter Amendment. SEATTLE. Wash.. Aug. 8. The Initia tive and referendum amendment to the City charter was today declared void by Judge Arthur E. Griffin, of the Superior Court. The court holds that the legisla tive powers of a city are vested in the Mayor and City Council by state law, and that the amendment attempted to divest the city authorities of the powers granted them by law. . , The decision was rendered In a suit to prevent the Issuance of saloon licenses, and the Anti-Saloon League, beaten In the Superior Court will appeal to the Su preme Court. Special sal fine shoe at Rosenthal's. REDUCTIONS ON TRUNKS One-Fourth Off This Week Our entire stock included in this sale. We have all sizes and shapes in this large showing and each trunk is guaranteed to be first-class in every way. They are braced, bolted, stayed, lined and finished in the most modern manner and, everything considered, no better trunk can be found. Come in and look them over. We are pleased to show them. CROSS LONDON GLOVES AND LEATHERS t & N a jr 1r PHOTO PAPER REDUCTIONS 12c dozen, 3x sy2 Mirmont, now. . M 12c dozen, 3x 4 Mirmont, now. . 4 15c dozen, 3x 5 Mirmont, now. . 6 15c dozen, 4x5 Mirmont, now. . " 6 30c dozen, 5x7 Mirmont, now. . 45c dozen, 6x8 Mirmont, now. . 14 $3.00 gross, 5x7 Mirmont, now $1.40 $4.50 gross, 6x8 Mirmont, now $1.65 $6.50 gross, 8x10 Mirmont, now $2.90 FOR ONE WEEK ONLY LIQUOZONE Antiseptic Soap 300 Doz. Reg. 25c Cake THIS WEEK SIX CAKES FOR 25c SEE SOAP DISPLAY Washington-St. Window WE PRINT CALLING, BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL CALLING CARDS ELECTRIC BATTERY For the home treatment of head ache, backache, nerve troubles, neuralgia, paralysis, rheumatism and numerous other painful ailments. It's inexpensive and simple to operate. ASK ABOUT IT OLIVE OIL "WOODLARK" Is made from selected Cal ifornia olives, and has no superior. We recommend it especially for family use. Three sizes: Pints 50 Quarts 85 Gallons $3.50 EXCHANGE 11 HOME!6",1 W00DARD, CLARKE SCO. FOURTH AND WASHINGTON DIES BY 1 III! Nels Bbodeen, Boring Farmer, Blown Up by Dynamite. AN ECCENTRIC CHARACTER Lived With His Daughter, "Who Had Prepared to Ieave Him. Girl Hears Explosion, Rrnis to Home of a Neighbor. OREGON CITY, Or., Aug. 3. (Spe cial.) Nels Boodeen, a farmer residing one mile north of Boring, on the Sprlntrwater division of the Portland Railway. LlKht & Power Company, killed himself at 4 o'clock this after noon by exploding dynamite. Boodeen was about 45 years of age. and was a. man who held little or no Intercourse with his neighbors. He was a widower and lived with his daughter, but his recent eccentricity raused trouble between them, and last Saturday Bhe announced her Intention of coming to Oregon City and "f"" lng a lawyer, with the object of divid ing their property and leaving her father, with whom she had a great deal of trouble. Daughter Hears Explosion. This afternoon Miss Boodeen, who Is about 20 years of age. heard a terrific explosion near the house and hastened to the home of Mr. Smith, who lives a. quarter of a mile distant, and told Smith that she believed her father had killed himself. An Investigation proved this only too true. While his crazy deed was not wit nessed, it is evident Boodeen obtained a quantity of dynamite and Mew him self up behind his own barn. Boodeen settled at Boring about three years ago. Last Summer he went to Montana and brought Mrs. Mary Patrick to Portland, with the avowed Intention of marrying her. She had about JfiO, which she entrusted to her Intended husband, but he cashed the. draft and refused to give her the money or to have anything more to do witlh her, and she instituted proceedings against him. Believed to Have Been Insane. In order to evade the payment of the Judgment that Mrs. Patrick obtained, Boodeen transferred his property to his daughter, and Mrs. Patrick brought suit to have the pretended sale set aside on the ground of fraud, but Boodeen finally paid the Judgment and costs in the case and was given a quit claim deed to his own property. It Is believed that he was of unsound mind. Iiewlston to Hold Big Fair. LEWISTON, Idaho, Aug. 3. (Spe cial.) Active preparations are being made for the annual Lewleton-Clarks-ton Interstate Fair the second week In October. The Lewiston Commercial Club is entering actively into the ar rangements, and will use its influence to procure a number of special excur sion trains, not only from the Clear water and Palouse sections, but also from the Walla Walla country, Port land, Seattle and Tacoma. The club will also try to arrange for the attend ance of the Governors of Oregon, Washington and Idaho. OVERTAKEN WITH HOUNDS Short-Lived Liberty for Convicts Who Escaped at Walla Walla. WALLA WALLA, Wash., Aug. 3. (Spe cial.) James Casey, convict No. 4715. and Frank Weston, No. 4423; serving sentences for forgery and burglary in the State Penitentiary, who escaped) at noon today, were captured this evening about two miles west of town on Mill Creek, the bloodhounds from the prison having traced the n to their hiding place in the brush. Casey was sentenced in Stevens County to an indeterminate term and entered the prison In 1907. Weston was sentenced to three years from King County and had been In the prison since March 21. 1908. Both men were employed on the con struction gang in the prison grounds at the time they made their escape. The men had not had an opportunity to change their clothes and would have been easily recognized had they left the brush along the creek Northwestern People in New York. NEW YORK. Aug. 3. fSpeclal.) Peo ple from the Northwest registered at New York hotels today as follows: From Portland C. Savage, V. N. Twoo mey, at the St. Andrew; C. E. Brough ton, at the Marlborough; L. E. Kane, at the Albert. From Baker City, Or. H. W. Foreman. at the Imperial. From Walla waua, asn. w. r Hooper, at the Victoria. From Everett. Wash. F: B. Thome, at the Wellington. From Spokane F. M. Tyler and wife, at the Imperial. From Tacoma .wifs jh. xn, Park Avenue. , j r Vnnalinr lit the T nod- ward; Miss M. E. Randle, at the Navarre; L. w. David ana wire, si a.u, .i r t ivfrtrtT. nt tlie Cadil lac: W. R. Moore and wife, Mrs. I. W. Grey, Miss Grey, at the latnam: jubs xu. Inman, F. C. Porter, at the Hoffman; J. M. Wilson, at the Continental. Whaler Makes Record. VICTORIA, B. C. Aug. 30. The steamer Princess Ena, from Kyuquote, with a cargo of whale oil. brought news that the steam whaler St. Lawrence took 70 whales In July, a record month's work. In all the St. Lawrence hag taken 208 whales this season. A potlatch was held at Kyuquote Sunday to celefbrate the taking of the 200th whale. The eteamer Greenwich, which took a cargo of coal from Ladysmith to Cape Nome and was injured by Ice in Behring Sea, reached Wllllamhead quarantine sta tion tonight and will go iuto Esquimau tomorrow, to et ter the drydock for re pairs. Woman In Charge Dairy Exhibit. SALEM, Or.. Aug. 3-(Special.)-The State Board of Agriculture has this year placed the dairy department of the State Fair under the supervision of a woman, Mrs. S. A. Yoakam. of Marshfteid, who is the pioneer in the practical uee of the milking machine in the da'jy- "JT: Yoakam te now arranging for the exhibit at the fair next month, and among other things, will have on display all the dif ferent styles of milking machines Dem onstrations of the manner In which the machines work will be given twice each day. ' Lifted the Sunday Lid. ROSEBURG. Or.. Aug. 3. (Special.) Two more arrests for violating the Sunday-closing law will be made in thia city tomorrow. The defendants will be A. T. Thompson and G. L. Bllnt. Both will be charged with keeping their saloons open on Sunday, August . 2. In violation of the Sunday-closing law. Dry Month at Grays Harbor. ABERDEEN. Wash.. Aug. 3. (Spe cial.) The report of the Weather Bureau shows that In July only an eighth of an inch of water fell, the lowest rainfall rec ord of any slnglo month In the history of Grny's Harbor. and a maurs work MM Nature and a woman's work com bined have produced. the grandest remedy for woman's ills that the world has ever known. In the good old-fashioned days of our grandmothers they relied upon the roots and herbs of the field to cure disease and mitigate suffering. The Indians on our "Western Plains to-day can produce roots and herbs for every ailment, and cure diseases that baffle the most skilled Ehysicians who have spent years in le study of drugs. From the roots and herbs of the field Lydia E. Pinkham more than thirty years ago gave to the women of the world a remedy for their pe culiar ills, more potent and effica cious than any combination of drugs. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is now recognized as the standard remedy for woman's ills. Mrs. Bertha Muff, of 615 N.G St, Louisiana, Mo., writes : "Complete 'restoration to health means so mneh to me that for the) sake of other suffering: women I am willing to make my troubles public. "For twelve years I had been suffer ing with the worst forms of female ills. During; that time I had eleven different physicians without help. No tong can tell what I suffered, and at times I could hardly walk. About two yeftrt ago I wrote Mrs. Pinkham for advice, I followed it, and can truly say that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound and Mrs. Pinkham's advice re stored health and strength. It is worth mountains of gold to suffering women." What Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound did for Mrs. Muff, It will do for other suffering women. 1